Leading with purpose: Karen Sloan

Karen Sloan is leading with purpose
Home Insights Leading with purpose: Karen Sloan

This International Women’s Day, the global theme ‘Give to Gain’ highlights how progress accelerates when we share knowledge, opportunities, support, and advocacy.

As we spotlight Karen Sloan, Divisional Director for Heating and Compliance at Liberty, we see how a commitment to giving – through leadership, guidance, and advocacy – helps strengthen communities, raise standards, and foster a culture where people feel genuinely valued and supported.

Leading with purpose Liberty team with Tim Wates

From planning desk to boardroom


For Karen, leadership isn’t about fitting a mould or leaning on titles – it’s about setting standards that keep people safe, respected, and supported. With nearly three decades in social housing, her approach has been shaped by lived experience, resilience, and a conviction that effective leadership begins with an honest understanding of how services truly feel to the people who rely on them.

Beginning her career in a planning role within a largely male‑dominated, technically-focused environment, Karen quickly learned that leadership positions were often reserved for those with engineering backgrounds. As her career progressed, Karen often found herself competing against technically trained candidates. Rather than seeing her own non-technical background as a limitation, she saw it as an opportunity to bring a different and valuable perspective.

“You don’t need to be technical to know what good customer service looks like,” she says. “People always remember how you make them feel.” And that belief has stayed with her throughout her career.

Leading with purpose Liberty team

Leading through uncertainty

As the sector continues to grapple with skills shortages, increasing regulatory demands, and the drive toward net zero, Karen focuses on the opportunities these shifts create for growth, resilience, and improved service.

For her, the answer starts with investing in people – upskilling the workforce to build confidence and capability, and creating clear, accessible career pathways that help individuals progress and stay in the industry.

She advocates for structured training, mentoring, and development routes that open doors for those who may previously have felt overlooked or unsure of how to advance.

Setting a higher standard

In 2022, Karen was named IGEM Leader of the Year, recognised for paving the way for greater representation and championing the development of a more balanced and inclusive workforce. The recognition mattered – not just personally, but for what it signalled to others. “I want people to see that there’s space for different leadership styles in this sector,” she says. “And that empathy and high-performance aren’t opposites.”